Disillusioned with Employee Engagement Surveys? You are Not Alone!

CEOs and Heads of HR are increasingly skeptical about employee engagement surveys. If you are reading this article, you are probably in that same camp. How can this be? We all know how important it is to have engaged employees. The research evidence is overwhelming. As executives and managers in organizations, we don’t need research to tell us that engaged employees are better performers.

Fig.1 - Gallup’s State of the American Workplace 2010-2012.

Since the Year 2000, Gallup research shows employee engagement has hovered around 30%. I don’t have access to the original data to be certain, but as a researcher my eye tells me this is a remarkably flat trend line. About 30% of the American workforce have been engaged throughout this period of time. That means that 5 out of every 10 workers is coasting and 2 out of 10 are actually working against the organization that employs them. And it has not changed significantly since the turn of the century!

We know engagement is good. We have the ability to measure engagement factors. Surely those thousands of organizations doing the measuring are taking action to change things? And yet there is no significant overall improvement – no significant increase in engagement; no significant decrease in active disengagement. No wonder there is disillusionment in the executive offices!
So what is happening?

Employee Engagement Surveys are measuring symptoms in organizations. They are actually doing a pretty good job at measuring these symptoms. We know higher engagement is related to better performance, so we are measuring something that matters. But just as giving an aspirin to treat a fever provides symptomatic relief, organizations are treating the symptoms of poor engagement. Certainly, they get some immediate relief, but the underlying disease, the root cause, is not being addressed. Just as the fever will come back if you don’t treat the infection, the symptoms of poor engagement come back when you stop the interventions.
Let’s look at two examples to demonstrate what I mean. Every engagement survey I have ever seen comes back low in two areas, so I will pick them as the examples. Employees say to management through survey responses:

We have poor communication

We have poor collaboration

Symptom 1: Poor Communication
When an employee expresses concern about a lack of communication in the office, they’re often reflecting water cooler conversation that goes something like this:

“Senior Management made this decision last week and I only found out about it to-day – I wasted a whole week of my time. We sure have poor communication here!”

“I have my performance management review tomorrow and I have no idea what my boss is going to say; he never gives me any feedback. We sure have poor communication here!”

These are real issues. They are flagged as poor communication because that is the best language the employees have to describe the situation. When the executive management team sees “poor communication” in the results of an employee engagement survey, the correct course of action is not to publish more newsletters or send more memos. Poor communication is a symptom of a deeper root cause problem: the absence of a formal accountability and authority framework. The employees may express a lack of communication, but the real issue lies in the managers who have failed to establish and maintain open and working channels with their employees. The information, through context setting and delegation, needs to be provided in the right size and at the right time to be meaningful to an employee. Only a manager can do this – it cannot possibly be done centrally.

The proper recourse is to ensure that a smoothly operating accountability and authority framework is in place to ensure that work is clearly delegated down the organization within context that is appropriate for each employee.

Symptom 2: Poor Workplace Collaboration
When employees experience problems with how work flows across the organization, it is often labelled as “poor collaboration”. Someone in another department missed a deadline so the employee couldn’t do his or her work. Unreasonable sounding demands are made by peers in other departments, handoffs are missed, work is duplicated. One often hears comments like these:

“I worked on a project for two weeks before I found out it was also assigned to someone else.”

“I am so upset – my boss is angry and I can’t finish the work until Finance gives me that report – they are already 2 weeks late.”

Again, the root cause is not poor collaboration. There isn’t a lack of willingness for colleagues to support each other; there is no innate desire to sabotage co-workers. The root cause is that the organization does not have an accountability and authority framework in place for how work flows across the organization.

When the executive team sees “poor collaboration” appearing on employee engagement surveys, the root cause lies in the systems for doing work – not necessarily in the employees themselves. The intuitive reaction to these findings is to create team-building exercises for management. But this isn’t about team building across functions… it is about the absence of an accountability and authority framework for delegating the flow of work across the organization.

An effective manager supports others in the organization, monitors workflow, and ensures that the day-to-day work of his or her staff is improved by working together, rather than by working in silos. This can only happen within a framework that is set by the CEO and within common context throughout the organization. When the CEO establishes a clear accountability and authority framework for the action and interaction of staff, work will flow more smoothly across the organization, conflict will be reduced, and the silo mentality will be broken.

There is only one way to attack the symptoms of employee disengagement in an organization. In most circumstances, the problems identified by staff are caused by problems at the management level. For employees to be engaged, managers need to manage! And this requires an accountability and authority framework that is clear and implemented down and across the entire organization.

Effective Managers™ has developed a manager effectiveness assessment, based on research conducted with the Telfer School of Management at the University of Ottawa. This survey-based assessment provides a means of assessing the effectiveness of managers on dimensions such as:

What percentage of time are your managers spending on value-added work (our benchmark tells us it is 55%)?

How much accountability do managers feel they are carrying?

How clear are managers about their accountability – for delivering objectives and for managing subordinates?

The Effective Managers™ Manager Effectiveness Assessment is a great tool for CEOs and HR to diagnose managers’ effectiveness. This research-based survey can get to the root cause of issues in the way that an employee engagement survey does not.
When an organization works to improve the accountability of its management team, employees feel more engaged in their work – and that leads to a more productive organization.

About Dwight Mihalicz
Dwight Mihalicz is Treasurer of ICMCI and has over 40 years of organization experience in a broad variety of organizations and situations. Over this period he has been required to focus on and solve a broad variety of complex problems in local, national, international and global settings. Throughout his career, he has developed extensive expertise in supporting improvement processes with large organizations.
He has formed a company, Effective Managers™, specializing in the improvement of productivity and effectiveness of managers. His focus is on working with CEOs and Heads of HR to help them improve organizational performance by helping managers to be more effective. Dwight has recently published a book, The Effective CEO: The Balancing Act that Drives Sustainable Performance, available @Amazon or the Effective Managers™ web site. Visit www.effectivemanagers.com for more resources on managing effectively.

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